130 Misc. 516 | New York County Courts | 1927
This is an application by the petitioner, the County of Madison, for confirmation of the commissioners’ report herein, which awards the defendant $2,850 for his premises at Chittenango Falls, consisting of a small piece of land and building thereon, which was taken by the county for highway purposes. The defendant objects to the confirmation of this report upon the following grounds:
First. That the report does not state the rule adopted by the
Second. That in any event the amount awarded is insufficient and inadequate.
Third. That the commission did not give consideration to the elements making up the proper value of the property.
Numerous witnesses as to the value were sworn by both parties, and there was great divergence as to the value, the petitioner’s witnesses varying from $1,300 to $3,000. Three of these placed the value at $3,000, one of them at $1,300 and one at $2,300; the defendant’s expert witnesses from $12,500 to $18,000.
Defendant also offered proof as to the structural value of the building on the premises and as to his net profits from the business conducted, which was a summer business supplying tourists and. picnickers with meals, lunches and such merchandise as is generally sold at similar places. The building was well adapted to the purposes for which the business was conducted, as established by the evidence. The question of structural value, as well as profits of the business, are elements to be considered by the commission. (Matter of City of New York, 198 N. Y. 84, 88; Matter of City of New York, 213 App. Div. 187, 190.) There was but one witness who testified as to structural value, and he was produced by the defendant, a builder and carpenter, who swore that the cost of reconstruction of the building from such material as this building was originally constructed from, would be about $4,000. The witness also gave it as his opinion that the building was equal to sixty per cent of a new building. To my mind this gave the commissioners more or less latitude in determining the value of the building. Did the commissioners give proper consideration to the elements of profits as affecting the market value of the property condemned? Three of the petitioner’s witnesses, who each placed the value of the premises taken at $3,000, swore that they did not give any consideration to the question of profits. The opinion of defendant’s expert witnesses is founded on an erroneous assumption.
Smith, the defendant, first testified that the gross receipts for the year 1926 were $8,538.73, and that the net profit for that year was $3,772.92, and that the average net for the last three years had been $3,000; and the defendant’s experts gave their opinions of value, based on these figures. Later the defendant, on further examination, divulged the fact that he had not deducted anything for his own labor, which he fixed at $1,000 per year, and that established a net income of $2,000 per year for the last three years. The expert witnesses were not recalled to fix a new valuation upon these figures. The value of defendant’s labor was not questioned
There seems to have been some conflict in the decisions of this State as to how far the commissioners may go in acting upon information obtained outside the record. There are decisions holding that the commission may use its own judgment. (Matter of Bronx Parkway Commission, 206 App. Div. 526, 532; Matter of Town of Guilford, 85 id. 207.) The preponderance of authority seems to hold that the award must have support in the record, and that the knowledge obtained in viewing the premises must be used in connection with the evidence, and this rule has been sustained by the Court of Appeals. (Matter of City of New York, 198 N. Y. 84; People ex rel. Olin v. Hennessy, 159 App. Div. 814, 816; Matter of City of New York [Crotona Park], 142 id. 665, 667; Matter of Simmons [Ashokan Reservoir], 132 id. 574, 576.)
Section 152 of the Highway Law requires the commission to file their minutes with their proceedings. One of the purposes requiring the minutes to be filed is that the court may determine whether or not the award is justified by the evidence. The courts have frequently sustained awards for less than the amounts given by any experts, when there was some basis therefor within the record. (Matter of Simmons [Ashokan Reservoir], 132 App. Div. 574; Matter of City of New York [Avenue “ C ”], 151 id. 83, 85.) Matter of Simmons (supra) was a case where the commission awarded an amount less than the experts gave for either side, but the court held that the assessed value of the property was some basis in the evidence upon which the commission might base its award, even if much lower than that given by the experts.
There was other evidence given in this case which has more or less bearing upon the amount of profits from the business. The defendant’s proof tends to show that as many as 10,000 people came to the Falls on Sundays and holidays during the period from
If the commission deems it necessary to take additional evidence, it may file a new report; otherwise a supplemental report may be filed as herein suggested. I do not intend to hold that the commission did not take into consideration the proper elements of damage, but, owing to the nature of the evidence as outlined and the holding of the cases cited as to the form of the report, a report should be submitted in accordance with this memorandum, and, upon receiving such report, I will determine the matter of confirmation.